\ 



UBRABY OF CONGRESS 



014040 992 3 







615^4 



^J4 



MRIAL DATS, 



SEPTEMBER 11 AND 12, 1889. 



ff}£ 25fH fEHl^SYLVANlA VOLU|\lf££j^S. 



1-4— ^#»— »-^ 



ADDRESS OF THOMAS V. COOPER, PRIVATE OF CO. C. 



Comrade t, and Survivors of the 2Gth 

Pennsylvania Volunteers : 

We are gathered here upon an occasion 
made doubly patriotic by the law and the 
pride of our State to perform a most patri- 
otic wurli — to dedicate a monument to the 
valor of our dead comrades and the hero- 
ism of a regiment which was the first of 
the three year organizations, and which, if 
patriotism can be measured, hrst saw that 
tiie war for the Union meant continued 
hardship, sacrifice and bravery. Almost 
iis entire membership came from Phila- 
delphia and the adjoining county of Dela- 
ware. The record of its intentions stands 
out as the grandest, in its example to the 
other long term commands which quiclily 
followed. The record of its deeds is syu- 
ou^'mouswith that of the Army of "the 
Potomac, save at Gettysburg, the greatest 
battle known to mod rii history, and here 
it excelled all other Pennsylvania ret^i- 
ments in its lossf-s in liilled and wounded, 
in proportion to the number engaged, and 
the losses of the Pennsylvania commands 
excelled those of any other in the Union 
Army. You all remember how, during 
the long march through Virginia and Mary- 
laud to the battle lield, at the uigbdy biv- 
ouacs every element of Slate pride and 
likewi.se evei'y feature of JNaiional love 
were summoned to support the universal 
proposition that there would be no reces- 
sion upon Northern soil. 

Hisioiy records the fact that there was 
none, and it is within the personal knowl- 
edge of all the survivors of the 26th that 
the Third Corps, to the last man, stood its 
ground, and even refused to lall bacw 
when the right of the evening of the second 
day was hottest to ground suited to the 
align nieut sought by General Meade, and 
not until the shades of night had fallen 
and the battle had lulled, and an under- 
standing of the situaHon had been gather- 
ed, did it do so. 

Gettysburg was the deadliest of the great 
battles of modern history, and for an or- 
ganization like our own to stand out as the 
one losing most in actual battle, is a dis- 
rtiuction which tuesurviving members can- 
not forget while memory ol the struggle 
lasts. 

It is understood that those chosen to de- 



liver the orations peculiar to this day, 
shall confine themselves to a brief descrip- 
tion of the part played by the command 
immediately before and during the battle 
—this with a view tc enable the Memorial 
Association to compile detailed historical 
information. 

Ail of our comrades who participated re- 
call the march on June 11th, 1863, to Hart- 
wood church, over the familiar lines of the 
Rappahannock ; thence on the 12th to 
Bealstou, with Humphrey's division, 
(Hooker's old and our own) advanced to 
the river, where we heard bv our camp- 
fires the stories of skirmishes a't Newtown, 
Uedarville and Middletown. 

On the 14th our march from Bealeton 
to Mana.ssas is remembered as one of the 
hottest, many of the division and corps 
falling from sunstroke, so that when 
night came the losses, if they had been 
compiled, would have hela comparison 
with a battle. At Manassas we had to 
rest until the partially disabled recov- 
ered, and on the 17th we moved quietly 
to Ceutreville, over ground made famil- 
iar by the battles of Bristoe and Bull Run , 
of the previous yea --. At Centreville we 
could hear the clash of arms at Aldie, 
and ttje next morning received the news 
of skirmishes in our front at the Point, o* 
R(.>ck,s, f horoughiare Gap and Middle- 
burg. On the 19th we moved to Gum 
Springs, where'we remained until the 
25th, then crossed the Potomac upon pon- 
toons at Edwards' Ferry, and there began" 
the unprecedented forced march over the 
long tow-path to the mouth of the Moto- 
cacy. No man who participated in that 
inarch can over forget the driving rain, 
the slipperj' and narrow pathway, with 
water to the right of us, v/atar" to the 

left of us, vvater above, water below 

without opportunity to halt, or rest, or 
eat or drink, until the late hours of night 
found us at our destination. On the 26th 
we reached the Point of Rocks, the 27th 
Middletown, while on the 28th we rested 
near Woodsboro, with news of skir- 
mishes near Rockville and Wrightsville, 
Marylaod, and at Oyster Point, Penn- 
sylvania — where blood was tlowing upon 
tbe soil regarded as peculiarly our own. 
The 29lh saw us at Tanejtowu, the 30th 



5^ 



o 



I 



at Bridgeport, with ever-coming^ news 
of skirmishes and actions on front and 
flank. On July 1st we moved from Bridge- 
port via Emmettsburg to ttie field of battle, 
and wnile our gallant 1st Brigade was en- 
route, late in the night, with the 26th at 
the head of the column, we marched into 
the Confederate lines near ihe Black Horse 
Tavern, quietly gathered in the only 
picket post in sight, about-faced in majes- 
tic silence, and resumed the right road to 
Gettysburg, iu time to assume our place 
upon tbe second day of the battle. In fact 
we arrived at the midnight closing the 
tirst and opening the second day, and after 
what proved Liut a nap, our command was 
awakened, cooked all the coffee and ate 
the few crackers that remained of our ra- 
tions, then stacked arms, deployed as un- 
armed skirmishers, and tore down the 
fences between the Baltimore pike and the 
Ecimettsburg road— a novel proceeding, 
but a fit precursory to the slaughter whicb 
followed. About 3 p. m., our Third Corps 
moved to the front, with our Brigade at 
the celebrated Peach Orcbard, and our 
regiment covering the rigiit hank of the 
Division, separated from Hancock's Second 
Corps by a gap which proved inviting to 
the enemy, for here immediate and re- 
peated attempts were made to pierce our 
lines bj' bold dashes and charges. All of 
them were resisted, and but one came 
near accomplishing its destructive pur- 
pose. This was late in the evening, when 
a large rebel force, covered by smoke of 
the gtms, quickly crossed the Emmetts- 
burg road, and protected by the depression 
at the right of the little and now demolish- 
ed stone house which flanked the Peach 
Orchard, wltb sudden rush and yell plung- 
ed itself upon our already depleted ranks. 
Thou the 26th and the Ist Massachusetts, 
our gallant Yankee companions upon 
many battle fields obeyed the order of Col. 
Blaisdell and Major Bodine, and changed 
direction by tbe right flank, in the very 
face of overpowering numbers. In this 
way tbe cbarge was cliecked, and tlie 
enemy were kept closely engaged until a 
division from the Second Corps came to 
our relief and saved the line. This strug- 
gle V. as the most deadly of the day and of 
the entire battle, and as well of any battle 
Known to the war. Its teri (he force is seen 
in the unprecedented numbers of killed 
and wounded, and the high courage ol the 
26th is shown by the fact that no man ran, 
and but 7 were captured and missing out 
of 213 lost in a total number of 365 engaged. 
In the repeated cLarges ot the second day 
nearly two out of every three of our regi- 
ment engaged, fell with a greatly superior 
number of the enemy close about them — 
and what lew remained hold their ground. 
These frightful losses were laigely due to 
the heroic change of direction made by the 
two regiments named, while under fire 
and at close quarters— the most difficult 
movement known to military tactics, and 
the one above all others calling for quick 
intellitience and high courage. 

Patriotic com i>arisou8 are not odious, 
as every soldier realizes in talks^,of the 
war with surviving comra es. Each and 
every man loves to tell his story of daring, 
and as fondly loves to hear a better one 
from his comrade. And none of the 78 



Commands of Pennsylvania, which this 
day dedicate monuments in honor of 
their fallun heroes, will deem odious the 
comparison which history hands down as 
to the brave deeds and the unexampled 
sacrifice of tbe 26tb Pennsylvania in the 
battle of Gettj^sburg. Rothermel's great 
painting selects the charge of Pickett's 
division and the stone angle guarded by 
the Second Corps under Hancock, as the 
dramatic point of the struggle, and it was 
upon tbe third day, but neither this point 
nor Little Round Toi>, nor Culp's Hill, 
norBiiford's famous dismounted men, 
stood a shock like that hurled against 
Humphrey's division of the Third Corps, 
and especially against our first Brigade, 
and even more particularly airainst the 
26th Pennsylvania,which held the right of 
the line. Only the 124th, 140th and 72nd 
Pennsylvania, and the 111th and 126th 
New Yorli in Hancock's Second Corps, 
approached the losses of the 26th Penn- 
sylvania, and a truthful history will show 
that the valor and sacrifice at and near 
the peach orchard equalled any ever 
known to the world upon any battle 
field. 

The 121st, 142d, 151st, 143rd, 149th and 
150th Pennsylvania Regiments were all 
of the First Army Corps, and tiie losses 
of these regiments, while very great, were 
not so great in killed and wounded, in 
proportion to the number engaged, as the 
26tb, and yet those which I have named 
suflered more than any other portion of 
the Union Army. They were not the 
subject of any paintiner, but if patriotic 
blood, shed upon this field, were needed 
to color the canvas, the great supply 
woiUd come from them, our Pennsylvania 
commands, and if reasons were asked 
for this wonderful heroism, they would 
be found In the determination of our 
Keystone boj's not to take one step back- 
ward npon their native soil. 

In support of these statements I place 
in appendix form the losses of all the 
Pennsylvania commands in the battle, 
and as accurate an account as I could ob- 
tain of the list of killed and wounded of 
the 26ih Pennsylvania, with Hospital 
Steward Brown's description of the nature 
of the wounds — nearly all of them the 
gun-shot, showing that they were receiv- 
ed in close action and directly under ritte 
fire. 

When night had fallen upon the second 
day our Corps obeyed the command to 
fall back and straighten the line. The or- 
ators of several anniversaries here, and 
the military critics have given much dis- 
cussion to the position of the Third Corps 
in the battle, being advanced in the shape 
of a horse-shoe much beyond the main 
line. It is not necessary that we should 
enter into or enlarge upon this discussion. 
It is sufficient for us to know that one 
fact rises upon all criticism ; while our 
losses were great, we gave as great to the 
enemy, and'weakoned them for the third 
and final day. 

On the second and third days our divi- 
sion lost 2100 out of 4,900, far the greater 
portion of the losses occurring in the- 
scenes here so crudely described. The 
26th lost few on the third day, and most 
of these by the explosion of a caisson at a 



^ time when the bowels of the earth seemed 
i^ to be shaken by the noise of the 240 guns 
\V on eaoh side which were then ushering in 
.jQ the tiual and fatal charge of Pickett's divis- 
ion. 
^■•^ I need not describe what followed the 
. great battle — the burial of the dead, the 
"''' rest, the pursuit and finally the unharmed 
^vtraversing some of the old ground in Vir- 
^, ginia. The old but ever new story of the 
greatest event known to the lives of all 
the surviving members of the 26th Penn- 
sylvania, is now retold, in a too general 
and too feeble way, but some of the points 
mentioned will awaken in your minds a 
fresh recollection of the day, of its sacri- 
fice and of its glorious results. Let me re- 
call an incident in closmg. On the even- 
ing of the second day, with a view to ex- 
cite the hopes and enthusiasm of our 
troops, telegrams were read to us announc- 
ing Grant's capture of Vicksburg, and the 
cheers were loud and long. The news 
was premature, but two days afterward it 
came in full truth, and it was Vicksburg 
and Gettysburg which made inevitable 
the triumph of the Union. All, alter these 
battles, was but useless sacrifice, which 
came through the lack of discernment or 
stubborness of the head ot the Confed- 
eracy. 

More than a quarter of a century has 
passed since the battle we are here to 
commemorate. None of us can ever see 
its like again. If each and all could fiud 
the elixir of youth, and carry his life 
down the coming centuries, he could not 
again see the like ot Gettysburg in civil- 
ized warfare. The inventions sin<;e made 
in deadly explosives — in dynamite, mil- 
lenite, structite — explosives which are a 
thousand-fold greater than any which 
deafened our ears upon this field, where 
the roar of 480 caonon were heard, and the 
sharp rattle of 100,000 rifles— a battle like 
that of Gettysburg is no longer possible. 
Though effective beyond our power to 
measure at the time, it is well that it is 
the last of its kind. It served a purpose, 
now indisputably established, and let us 
hope that il was, to our people, at least, 
the final proof of the poet's lines, where- 
in he says :— 

"Som6 things are worthless, some so good 
That nations which buy buy only with blood." 

APPEND, X. 
The members engaged and the losses of 
the Pennsylvania commands at the battle 
of Gettysburg. 
Reg't Present. Dead. Wounded. C. & M. Total. 



132 

14 

213 

HI 

28 

66 

46 

87 

2 

24 

5 

5 

41 



Reg't Present. Dead. Wounded. C. & M. Total. 







O. 


M. 


0. 


M. 


O. M 


11 


292 




10 




62 


60 


23 


688 


1 




1 


12 




26 


365 


1 


29 


10 


166 


7 


27 


824 


2 


7 


3 


23 


1 75 


28 


303 




6 


1 


19 


2 


29 


485 


2 


13 




43 


8 


30 


444 




13 


3 


30 




31 


273 




9 


2 


25 


1 


34 


334 








2 




35 


380 




3 


1 


20 




38 


377 








5 




39 


420 




2 




3 




40 


393 


1 


4 


3 


33 




41 


320 




1 




1 




42 


349 


2 


9 


8 


27 


2 


46 


262 




2 


1 


9 


1 


49 


318 






None 




53 


135 




7 


11 


56 


6 


56 


252 


1 


16 


5 


53 


1 54 



80 
130 







O 


M. 


O. 


M. 


C 


. M. 




57 


207 


2 


12 


9 


34 


3 


55 


115 


61 


400 








1 




1 


2 


62 


426 


4 


24 


10 


97 




40 


175 


63 


296 




1 


3 


26 




4 


34 


68 


383 


3 


10 


9 


117 




13 


152 


69 


329 


5 


44 


7 


64 


2 


15 


137 


71 


331 


2 


23 


3 


51 


3 


16 


98 


72 


458 


2 


60 


7 


121 




2 


192 


73 


332 




7 




27 






34 


74 


381 


2 


8 


4 


36 


2 


58 


110 


75 


258 


3 


16 


5 


84 




3 


111 


81 


190 




9 


5 


40 




8 


62 


82 


320 








6 






6 


83 


308 


1 


9 


3 


42 






55 


84 


240 




Not 


engaged 








88 


296 




7 


3 


49 


4 


47 


110 


90 


20S 


1 


10 


3 


40 


1 


39 


94 


91 


268 




4 


2 


13 






19 


93 


270 




1 


1 


8 






10 


95 


356 




1 




1 






2 


96 


356 








1 






1 


«8 


406 




1 


2 


8 






11 


99 


339 


1 


24 


4 


70 




11 


110 


102 


286 






None 








105 


274 


2 


13 


13 


95 




9 


132 


106 


3*5 


2 


10 


8 


43 




1 


64 


107 


255 




16 


8 


43 


6 


92 


165 


109 


149 




3 




6 




1 


10 


110 


152 




16 


6 


31 






53 


111 


259 




5 


1 


16 






22 


114 


312 




13 


1 


81 


3 


57 


155 


115 


182 




3 




18 




^ 


24 


116 


66 




3 




10 


1 


8 


22 


118 


332 


1 


2 


3 


16 




3 


25 


119 


466 








2 






2 


121 


306 




20 


5 


93 


1 


60 


179 


)S9 


511 


1 


3 


2 


14 






20 


140 


590 


3 


50 


8 


120 


3 


57 


241 


141 


209 


1 


41 


5 


81 




21 


149 


142 


362 


4 


27 


10 


100 


2 


68 


211 


143 


465 


2 


34 


10 


116 




91 


253 


145 


228 


3 


21 


6' 


50 




10 


90 


147 


298 


1 


5 




14 






20 


14S 


468 


2 


25 


5 


88 




5 


125 


149 


450 


1 


65 


14 


145 


4 


107 


3:^6 


150 


397 


3 


50 


9 


125 


4 


73 


264 


151 


467 


2 


79 


9 


172 


4 


71 


.337 


If 3 


569 


1 


40 


7 


117 




46 


211 


155 


424 




6 


2 


11 






19 








JAVALRY. 








1 


418 












2 


2 


2 














1 


1 


3 


394 




1 


5 


9 




6 


21 


4 


304 




1 










1 


6 


466 




3 




7 




2 


12 


8 


391 




Not Engaged. 






16 


411 




2 




4 








17 


448 












4 




18 


599 




2 




4 




8 


1 






ARTILLERY. 








B. 1st 


114 




3 


1 


8 






12 


F. " 


















G. " 


144 




7 


1 


12 




3 


2? 


O.ind 


105* 




1 


3 


7 




3 


!•> 


E. " 


139 








3 






3 


F. " 




1 


3 


1 


9 






14 


H. ;sd 


52 












1 


1 



*Effective force of Battery F. included. 

LIST OF WOUNDED OF THE 26TH PENNSYLVj<, 
NIA REG . AT THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBTJKG, 

JULY 2d and 3d, 1863. 
Wm. S. Small, Capt. K Wd. left thigh. 
James Kenny, C. Sg. C " breast. 
Thos. Lineham, Corp. C " right forearm. 
Jas. Durnell, Pr. D " fracture left elbow. 

Wm. Goodier, Pr. G " lip, frac. left jaw. 
Lewis Bail, Pr. K " nose, frac. bones. 

Wm. Wilson, Pr. K " left arm. 
Isaac P. Force, Corp. K " through left hand. 
Sam'lP. Morris, Sefg.K " fracture flbula,amp., 

died Juby 12th. 
Wm. Leech, Pr. B " right leg above knee. 

Syl'r Duboyce. Pr. I " right shoulder spent 

ball 
Wm. E. Reynolds, Pr. I " through right wrist. 
Jacob Elliuger, Pr. I " right side. 
Levi Robinson, Serg. H " left shoulder. 
Geo. Myers, Pr. H " through left arm. 

Fra's B. Bird, Lieu. H " left knee, di'd Phila 



Squire J. Alien, Pr. 
Casper Hecker, Pr. 
Win. S. Tonner, Pr. 
Thomas Btranz, Pr. 



Co. 
H 
H 
H 
H 



John Davis, Pr. H 

Mark J. Scull, Pr. H 
Joseph Carney, Pr. K 
Jos. Stevenson, Corp. C 
Hen. Goodfel'w, Cap. G 
Pairick Morris, Pr. F 
John Russell, Pr. A 

Charles Love, Pr. A 

John H. Garity, Pr. A 
"William Gordon, Pr. C 
Jai vis Thornton, Pr. B 
James Woodside, Pr. B 
Warren C. Hill, Pr. A 
Thr i C. Finley, Sergt. I 
Wpl. Morrison. Pr 1) 
Sam. F.WilUams, Cor. D 
Sam. G. Moffitt, <;apt. A 
Charles Ross, 1 Lieu. E 
Joseph Wilfong, Pr. A 
Hugh Gaitens, Pr. E 
Thomas Carson, Pr. b 
Geo W. Riddle, Pr. G 
«eo. Rosewelt, 1 Serg. K 
Geo. E. Cooper, Pr. C 
Charles Rose,Pr. D 

Henry Carroll, Pr. H 
M. Cunningham, Serg. E 
R. 0'Donnell,C Corp. H 
RuVien Haines, Pr. A 
John Carberry.Pr. F 

M V B Hutch' son, Serg.F 
Conrad Culliy.Pr. F 

P. Yankirk,Pr. A 

James McElwee,2 Lieu.B 
Lemuel W. Blair,Pr. D 
Edward Hughes, Pr. G 
Charles Johnson, Pr. E 
William Pillen.Pr. I 

James Patterson, Pr. I 
E. Montgomery, Serg. I 

John Longhran, Pr. H 
William Curran, Pr. H 

Theo. Morfltt, Corp. D 
Robt. Williams, I'r. D 
Dau. Fallen, Pv. A 

Jos. Carmichael, Pr. E 
Adam Potts, Pr. A 

Chas. Sinnex, Pr. A 
W. A. Hannah' ry,Pr. A 
John Taylor, Pr. A 

• ' x. Grant, Pr. A 

•nry Tuftus. Pr. G 
.w. Wilkinson, Pr. H 

ohn Flaunery, IP.H. D 
Thos.McOullough,Pr. E 
Nat. Roseufelt, riergt D 
S. W. Weiguer,S.Maj. 
Henry Walters, Pr. H 
».'. Montgomery, Pr. D 
John ( arr, Pr. C 

Benj. Sutch, Pr. K 

Henry Bowles, Pr. B 
Andrew Sloss, Seigt. B 

. .^ ^ T^ B 

C 
K 
K 
B 
C 
C 
B 
A 
E 



Jolin Boyd, Pr 
Jas. Connelly, Pr. 
Wm. Kumbo, Pr. 
Geo. W. Wood, Pr. 
Archi/d Hayes, Cor. 
Miclr'i Rodgers, Pr. 
PhillinMcManus, Pr, 
^^'m. Jathers, Pr. 
Henrv Wliitfleld, Pr. 
Wm. "Callau, Pr. 



Jos'^ph Connor, Pr. K 
Wm. Wiiliams, Pr. F 
Peter Langhran,Pr. F 
Michael McGrath, Pr. F 
T. J. Carman. J Lieu. F 
Solom in Moore, Pr. B 
C. Radabaugli, Corp. G 
Alber Bldredge, Corp. D 
George B. Gregg, Pr. I) 
John liatteity, Pr. D 
James Hammill, Pr B 



Wd. 

" right thigh. 
" through left heel. 
" through left arm. 
" left shoulder 

exit right side. 
" loft arm 
" right hip. 
" middle lore-arm. 
" through leg. 
" through r. fore-arm. 
" througli left side. 
" through left hip. 
" through left side 
" left scalp. 
" through left arm. 
" in back. 
" left fore-man, 
" left thigh. 
" througli right thigh. 
" contused lelt breast. 
" right tliigh. 
'• through right breast 
" left leg,!>ince amu'd. 
" through left thumb. 
" left neck, left cheek. 
" left calf. 
" through left hip. 
'• leg amputated. 
" risht thigh- 
" through neck. 
" lelt calf splintered. 
" left hand. 
" right arm. 
" shell wd. shoulder. 
" in abdomen, dead. 
" left groin. 
" tliroiigii right foot 
" left wrist. " 
" in back slight. 
" through thigh. 
" thigh, iieht scalp. 
" right scalp and leg. 
" side and fore-arm. 
•' thigh, right finger. 
" left arm amputated, 

and in back. 
■' both thighs. 
•' right kn?e fractur- 
ing bones ; fore-arm. 
" shoulder and side. 
" fractured ulna. 
" right thigh. 
" right calf. 
" right foot. 
" right aim, amputa'd. 
" left forearm. 
" finger. 

" left side and back.kd 
'* right leg above knee 
" both thighs. 
" lower right calf. 
" right thigh. 
" below knee, ball in. 
" right hip, dead. 
" left shoulder. 
" ankle and thigh. 
" left hip, right thigh. 
" left thigh. 
" right thigh. 
" calf, two place.s. 
" left calf. 
" right leg. 
" back and left side. 
" leg ; died of tetqnus 
Contused internally. 
" lefi side and jaw. 
" left arm. 
" left foie-arm. 
" right leg above knee 
" breast, fingers and 
ankle, died of Teta- 
nus, July 11. 
" left breast. 
" left fore-arm. 
" ri^ht arm, dead. 
" left arm. 

" right thigh, ball ex. 
" con'sion of left el'w 
" both thighs, slight. 
" fore-arm Aabdomen. 
" right thigh. 
" right ankle. 
" shell wound, calf. 



Co. Wd. 



Edward Trader, Pr. B 
Joseph Haymen, Pr. A 



George Roan, Pr. K 
Anthony Camp, Pr. C 
William Gordon, Cor. I 

Henry Rodgeis, Pr. K 
Chas. Nippers, Pr. A 
John Bailey, Pr. A 

John F. Williams, Pr.H 
H 



Charles Miller, Pr. 

A. Bechten, Corp. 
J( hn Longherrv, Pr. 
John Devon, Pr. 

C. Wendell, Corp. 
J. Mc Williams, Pr. 
Joseph Maxwell, Pr. 
W. K. Dobbins, Pr. 
John Dalton, Pr. 
G. Conohay, Pr- 



Robert Creighton, Pr. H 
G. W. Smith, Pr. H 
Henry Waters, Pr. H 
James Ward. Pr. H 

C. Friger, Pr. K 

A Mar.«hall, Pr. K 

John Jordan, Pr. K 

E. McGrugan Pr. K 
W. Gradeu, Pr. K 

R.Simpson, Serg. E 

Robt. Johnson, Serg. K 
L. Sheppard, Corp. E 
James Stevenson, Pr. E 
John Scott, Pr. E 

T. McCullen, Pr. E 
A. Patterson, Pr. E 
John S. Lake, Pr. B 
Thos. Archer, Pr. B 
John Cunningh'm, Pr.B 
Hugh Hemphill, Pr. B 
Chas. Raisncr, Sergt. D 
James Conroy, Pr. D 
Wm. Swenk, Capt. D 
Daniel Gilbert, Pr. I 
Jas. D. Head, F. S. 1 
Joseph Gueron, Pr. I 
John Craig. C. Corp. I 
John O'Kelly, Pr. I 
Lorenzo L. Bitter.s,Pr.C 
Donnis Hayes, Pr, C 
Thos. Newman, Pr. C 
Jos P. Young, Pr. C 
Harrison Clilton, Ser.A 
Chas. Giluin, Pr. A 

Benj. Wright, Lieu. A 
Rich'd Thomas, Cap. F 
James Caldwell, Lieu.F 
Geo. Gallagher, Pr. F 
Michael Sweeney, Pr. F 

MISSING 
John George Pr. B 

Russell, Pr. B 

Andrew Dougherty, P D 
Cas.S. Walters, Pr. D 
George Grant, Pr. F 
James Goldsmith, Pr. F 
James Wallace, Pr. G 



" right calf. 

" right arm, abdomen 

exit at back. Died 

July9tb. 
" hand, hip, died 13th. 
" right shoulder, ear. 
" right hip, left hip, 

right calf. Died 4th. 
" left breast. 
" through calf b legs. 
'' through lelt hand. 
" shoukler, riaht hip. 
" right fibula amputa- 
ted, died 10th. 
" left knee. 
" thigh amputated. 
" left thigh amputated 

died. 
" left thigh ; dead. 
" in left linee. 
" right hip. 
" left fore-arm. 
" back and hip, dead. 
" through left calf, 
"ill arm. 
" in right arm. 
" right shoulder'. 
" in side and arm. 
" right leg, left arm. 
" shoulder and arm. 
'■ right wrist, slight. 
" right elbow contused 
•' through right thigh. 
" back, exit groin. 
' right thigh. 
" right hand and leg. 
" back and right leg. 
" right leg. 
" right thigh. 
" through lelt arm. 
" in back. 
" neck. 



" left scalp, slight. 
" right hand, " 
' right wrist. 
' right elbow. 
' through foot. 

dead. 
" shoulder. 
" leg. 

■' right calf. 
•' right ankle. 
■' right arm. 
" insteo. 
" leg. 

' several places; dead. 
" hip. 
" right hip. 
" foot. 

Shell wound of back 



in Richmond. 



Godfrey Smith, Pr. K 



Supposed to be killed, 
known to be wounded 
in stomach. 



John Beck, Serg. A, C. Nonemaker, Pr. C, 
Adam Bohnort, Pr. D, Chas. Webster, Pr. C, 
Geo. Cogswell, C.Cor. A,Samuel Lynch. Corp. D, 
JohnBoyles, Pr. D, James Mitchell, Pr. D, 

Samuel Allen, Pr. A, Peter McCahan, Pr. E, 
Pryor C.Jameson, Pr.D, David Davis, Pr. F, 
Henry C. Meisser, Pr. A, George Kee. Pr. H, 
D. Willingmeyer, Pi-. A, Francis Smith, Pr. I, 
John Wilson, Pr. A, Wm. Neil, Pr I, 
John Little, Pr. B, Jas. C. Gelston, Corp.K, 

Robert Kenredy, Pr. B, Nathan Vanhorn. " K, 
Thomas Menice, Pr. C, John Devlin, Pr. K, 
John Burns, Pr. C, Eliakam Brown, Pr. K. 

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 



014 040 992 3 



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CONGRESS 




014 040 992 3 



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